Posts Tagged ‘Schmilco’

At this point their longevity may be the most compelling aspect of this Great American Band, who several great albums back discovered their greatest subject—the small compromises and contradictions that comprise family life—and made dad rock a legitimate subgenre. On this deep-album cut from Wilco Schmilco, whose title borrows from Nilsson Schmilsson, Jeff Tweedy communicates with song titles, rewriting the great charity hit from the ‘80s as means to shirk a little responsibility.

For over 20 years, Chicago Americana troupe Wilco has been a band of depth and intricacy. Singer-songwriter JeffTweedy has served up his personal insights on the mic as a revolving backing band of ace multi-instrumentalists dressed them in the Alt-country repose of A.M. and Being There, the ‘70s pop sheen of Summerteeth, and the minor symphonies of Yankee Hotel Foxtrot. By 2007’s Sky Blue Sky, the band settled on what would be its first stable lineup: JeffTweedy and his former Uncle Tupelo bassist buddy John Stirratt, experimental drummer and percussionist Glenn Kotche, guitar god Nels Cline, knob twiddler Mikael Jorgensen, and alt-country session hand Pat Sansone. The lineup honored Wilco’s commitment both to country and to pushing the envelope of this genre, but 2009’s Wilco (The Album) and 2011’s The Whole Love, the pair of full lengths that followed Sky Blue Sky, maybe fizzed when they ought to have popped.

Last summer’s surprise free release Star Wars was an attempt to redirect the band’s energy. At just over 33 minutes long, it’s the shortest Wilco studio album.

The songs were two- and three-minute pop-rock confections that pulled off the difficult feat of sounding both thoughtfully arranged and off the cuff. This month’s Schmilco seeks to extend the streak, revisiting the wiry energy of Star Wars over a dozen quiet acoustic tunes. Most of the new album’s songs were conceived around the same time as Star Wars, but Tweedy made the peculiar decision to split the fertile sessions in two: “The alternative to making two records would have been to spend another year really honing everything, all of it, getting it all right for that kind of release.”

The irony of the Star Wars/Schmilco project is that the decision not to whittle everything down to a single body of work is its saving grace.

If the major strength of Star Wars was getting Wilco, a band whose finest albums are also their busiest, to strip down, Schmilco’s is figuring out how to stash six players into the quiet of a backyard jam. “Normal American Kids,” introduced at a live show earlier this year as a solo Jeff Tweedy cut, gets a studio version that sneaks sweet, meandering electric guitar from Nels into the background. A few songs later “Nope” crams stuttering bits of riffs into the margins, the lead guitar coughing and spitting over the tune like Blur ax-man Graham Coxon did on “Coffee & TV.” “Nope” slowly unravels as it trips along, its personnel expanding to no less than three guitarists and two drummers. (Tweedy’s son Spencer lends Kotche a hand on Schmilco’s drums.) Between these extremes is a tapestry of shaggy guitar shuffles like the laconic “Happiness,” the demented, atonal “Common Sense,” and the muted punk blast of “Locator.”

Schmilco’s subtle intricacies provide cover for a series of vignettes of dreamers in various degrees of resignation. From the song titles — “Nope,” “Cry All Day,” “Someone to Lose,” “Shrug and Destroy” — down to the lyrics, Schmilco bleeds sadness. The deceptively titled “Happiness” opens on a devastating observation: “My mother always says I’m great, and it always makes me sad / I don’t think she’s being nice, I really think she believes that.” Album closer “We Aren’t the World (Safety Girl)” devilishly subverts the chorus of the star-studded ‘80s charity single “We Are the World” into a dart about settling: “We aren’t the world / We aren’t the children / But you’re my safety girl.” As a lyricist, Tweedy loves his abstractions. (“I am an American aquarium drinker / I assassin down the avenue”?) So Schmilco’s snap focus on dejected character studies, like the hopeless barfly of “Quarters,” who sweeps the place for quarters to play music on the jukebox, is jarring, but like the elegant arrangements that swirl and sputter underfoot, it feels like the work of a tightly wound unit taking chances. Wilco’s willingness to embrace risk and change at a point in its career where peers often retreat into comfort and self-parody suggests there could be another couple of decades of life left in this 22-year-old enterprise.

Despite playing the game for over two decades, the 49-year-old singer-songwriter has hardly ever sounded so intimate as he does on Schmilco, grappling with the never-ending angst of knowing that you never really can escape yourself. On album standout “If I Ever Was a Child”, he vividly paints this feeling, singing: “I slump behind my brain/ A haunted stain never fades/ I hunt for the kind of pain I can take.” The Chicago rockers add some color to each of the album’s 12 tracks by stripping things down to its core essentials.

Like this:

Sometimes we tell ourselves that the band is too famous, too important, that their label would never let them do a Take Away Show. We have a fantasy list: Radiohead, Tom Waits, Chuck Berry, Cat Power. Wilco. What if we tried to film them? for a Take Away Show The answer was unanimous and enthusiastic. I sent out an without believing it would come to fruition. But we didn’t know if all of the members of the group would play; we were told that it would depend on where we filmed. They wouldn’t have the time to wander through the streets; it rained that day anyway. But they were prepared for us, had placed all their instruments and some amps in the back of the hall,

Above all, we got the entire six. When there is magic happening I feel like a kid. Tweedy’s voice without amplification, Cline’s attitude — who has to be one of the most elegant guitarists on the planet –, Kotche, visibly moved…listen please to Wilco – Normal American Kids

For the session, the band performs two songs from their latest album, Schmilco, in the Museum Speelklok’s restoration studio, dedicated to the upkeep and repair of the museum’s impressive collection of self-playing musical instruments. Shot at the restauration room of Museum Speelklok during Le Guess Who? Festival in Utrecht, November 2016
Very special thanks to everyone at Le Guess Who? for sharing this wonderful clip, and Jeff Tweedy for being JeffTweedy.

A Take Away Show
In collaboration with Le Guess Who?, Paris-based La Blogotheque journeyed to Utrecht to record an intimate Take Away Show with Wilco.

Share this:

Like this:

Wilco will kick of their European tour in support of their latest album, Schmilco, tonight, and the band has marked the occasion by sharing a video for album track “Someone to Lose,” The bouncy tune is accompanied by a claymation video telling the story of a hungry griffin, an escaped worm and an interrupted wedding. It’s a wedding day turned tumultuous journey: a captive bride, a chivalrous groom and an enigmatic monster. Join along for a trip on this two-winged beast.“Someone To Lose” comes from Wilco’s latest album Schmilco. The band brings Schmilco to European stages starting tonight in Brussels, then off to Germany, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Netherlands, Italy, Austria, Switzerland, France and U.K. You get it — if you’re in Europe, chances are Wilco’s playing nearby.

Well, I'm dyslexic so writing about something I love: Music, might help but it's most likely just full of mistakes. That title is also lyrics from The Drones song called I Don't Want To Change. Oh, my name is William and thanks for having a look.